Tellabs 8800 Multi Service Router MSR Series Enabling New
Tellabs 8800 Multi Service Router MSR Series Enabling New
The Tellabs® 8800 Multiservice Router (MSR) series offers high-performance, carrier-class multiservice edge routers.
The Tellabs 8800 MSR series is available in three chassis sizes — Per-Flow Guaranteed QoS
six slots (Tellabs® 8830 Multiservice Router), 15 slots (Tellabs® 8840 State-of-the-art, custom Application-Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC)
Multiservice Router) and 19 slots (Tellabs® 8860 Multiservice Router) technology optimizes performance and traffic management. Per-Flow
— all of which share a wide range of interfaces with unmatched Queuing (PFQ) with Connection Admission Control (CAC) consistently
service flexibility. It enables service providers the ability to deliver ensures end-to-end ATM-like, deterministic, hard QoS across different
business-class IP and carrier Ethernet services, Frame Relay (FR), service types, including traditionally best-effort IP and Ethernet services.
Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) and Time Division Multiplexing Each ULC supports up to 32,000 PFQs (unidirectional) and 4,096
(TDM) private leased line services at speeds from N x DS-0 to per-group queues. For example, the Tellabs® 8860 will support 512,000
OC-192c/STM-64 and Ethernet services from 10 Mbps to 10 Gbps. PFQs per chassis.
The Tellabs 8800 MSR series scales from 80 to 320 Gbps in a
fully redundant, nonblocking shelf. Carrier-Class Reliability
The Tellabs 8800 series is a fully redundant platform providing
Feature Highlights carrier-class reliability. It offers immediate forwarding and hitless
service preservation for all Layer 2 and Layer 3 services. The Tellabs
Comprehensive Standards-based Signaling and Routing Support 8800 series supports a non-service affecting upgrade, called Tellabs®
The Tellabs 8800 MSR series supports full IP, ATM, FR and MPLS ServiceAssuredTM Upgrade. Based on real-time, the modular architecture,
control planes and pseudowire service interface all within the same the Tellabs® Multiservice Operating System (TMOS) software, is
chassis. It has one of the industry’s first ATM/MPLS control plane field-proven and time tested in more than a dozen carrier networks
interworking implementations. Tellabs was the driver and active worldwide.
contributor behide the ATM and MPLS control plane interworking
technical specification at the MFA Forum. In addition to UNI and NNI Next Generation Ethernet Support
support for ATM, FR and UNI for carrier Ethernet, the Tellabs 8800 Industry leading metro Ethernet implementation is first certified by
series uses LDP and RSVP-TE for MPLS signaling and traffic engineer- the Metro Ethernet Forum (MEF). The Tellabs 8800 series provides
ing. Moreover, it supports hierarchical and distributed PNNI for ATM true access network convergence, supporting E-line, E-LAN, Ethernet
routing and highly scalable MPLS and IP routing protocols such as over MPLS, Ethernet over ATM, Ethernet over FR and Ethernet over
BGP, MP-BGP, OSPF, IS-IS and PIM-SM. SONET (EoS) for both VPLS and Q-in-Q implementations in a multi-
vendor environment. In addition, the Tellabs 8800 series supports
Any-to-Any True Service Interworking at Line Rate per-flow guaranteed QoS with CAC for all types of Ethernet services.
Based on pseudowire architecture, a unified MPLS core for Layer 2 It has been proven and hardened in one of the world’s largest
services and TDM transport enables any customer with any Layer 1 metro-Ethernet deployments since 2003.
or Layer 2 access technologies such as ATM, FR, Ethernet/VLAN,
metro Ethernet, TDM, PPP and HDLC to communicate with each
other, regardless of access media. All I/O slots can support complex
any-to-any service interworking at 10 Gbps packet forwarding and
switching speed while performing lookup and filtering tasks.
data sheet
Tellabs® 8800 MultiService Router (MSR) Series — Enabling New Services and Network Convergence
Customer Benefits
Enhanced Service Level Agreements (SLA) OpEx Reduction
The Tellabs 8800 series opens up new revenue streams by offering The Tellabs 8800 series reduces truck rolls, lowers spares inventory
meaningful SLAs. These SLAs extend QoS contracts previously available and minimizes operational costs for service providers with any service,
only for ATM circuits to new and advanced broadband data services any channel, any port functionality:
such as Ethernet and IP. Mission-critical services can now exist on
technologies previously limited to traditional best-effort performance. n A single ULC that accepts a flexible set of mix and matched PLMs
spanning DS-3/E-3 to OC-192/ STM-64 or 10/100 Ethernet to 10 GigE.
Superior Traffic Management n Software-defined service edge enables any physical or logical port,
The Tellabs 8800 series ensures that policies defining SLAs for each channel or flow to be software configured to provide IP, FR, ATM,
service contract are honored. The state-of-the-art custom ASIC PPP, HDLC, MPLS or TDM.
technology provides deterministic and granular per-flow and per-service
SLA bandwidth management. Service-aware queuing techniques and
In addition, the effective use of rack space further reduces operational
traffic shaping help ensure predictability through varying levels of
complexity of managing multiple networks or network layers in the
network utilization.
service provider network. Reduced operations costs are facilitated to
bring greater profits and revenues.
Evolutionary Migration of Legacy Networks
The Tellabs 8800 series supports open, standards-based software and
Applications and Services
hardware to interface with legacy equipment and protocols. Deployed
The Tellabs 8800 series enables service providers to offer the following
legacy multiservice networks can be integrated with the Tellabs 8800
services on converged network architecture, benefiting from new
series-based network as part of a nondisruptive migration.
revenue opportunities while maintaining their legacy investments:
Enabling New Revenue Streams n Layer 1/Layer 2 Legacy Services
With the enhanced SLA and superior MPLS traffic engineering, the
Tellabs 8800 series enables service providers to offer high-growth – Private line service via TDM circuit emulation
Ethernet services using VPLS or Q-in-Q and MPLS VPN services – ATM service (Layer 2 VPN)
based on RFC 2547bis/4364 today, while supporting legacy ATM – FR service (Layer 2 VPN)
and FR services from the same platform.
n Ethernet Transparent LAN Services (L2 VPN)
Guaranteed Service Availability – 802.1Q
The Tellabs® ServiceAssuredTM Upgrade package of unique software – 802.1ad Provider Bridge/VLAN Stacking
and hardware assures no single point of failure, non-service affecting
– VPLS and H-VPLS for large-scale multipoint-to-multipoint connectivity
product upgrades, Layer 2 and Layer 3 redundancy, in-service network
n Layer 2 Network Interworking
expansion and distributed processing to maximize fault tolerance and
performance. Carrier-class design provides full redundancy in common – Virtual Private Wire Services (VPWS) for point-to-point ATM,
equipment and software resiliency features enable maximum service FR and Ethernet/VLAN (Layer 2 VPN)
and network uptime. – FR to ATM
n Layer 2 Service Interworking
Investment Protection
While increasing the breadth of the service portfolio, the Tellabs 8800 – Bridged and routed with ARP mediation
series extends service providers’ investment in legacy network equipment – FR to ATM
by scaling its capacity as customer demands grow, without forklift – ATM to Ethernet
upgrades. With significant high-density and high-speed capabilities, the
Tellabs 8800 series accommodates growth in both end-user traffic and – FR to Ethernet
services. The switch fabric is highly scalable, providing up to 320 n Layer 3 VPNs
Gbps of nonblocking performance in a single chassis. – High-performance Layer 3 IP VPNs
– IP VPN using GRE
CapEx Reduction
Service providers frequently maintain multiple core service networks
based on the individual end-customer services being offered. The
Tellabs 8800 series provides a consolidated network infrastructure,
collapsing multiple overlay networks to reduce the total number of
network elements. Capital expenditures are further reduced with
industry-leading technology, density and performance improvement.
data sheet
Tellabs® 8800 MultiService Router (MSR) Series — Enabling New Services and Network Convergence
n Broadband Aggregation
– DSL aggregation and backhaul using Ethernet or ATM Tellabs 8800 Series Architecture
– Metro Ethernet aggregation Switch and Control Cards (SCC)
The SCCs are the central resource of the Tellabs 8800 MSR series for
– ATM VPI/VCI mapping to Q-in-Q
both data-plane switching and the control and management functionality.
n High-Speed Access The highly scalable, efficient and redundant switch fabric is distributed
– EoS (X.86) and GFP across the SCCs. The SCCs provide N:1 automatic, hot-standby redundancy
– Broadband Internet access for the entire Tellabs 8800 series and data plane load sharing.
– IP-enabled FR service The switch fabric has the following switching and fault tolerant features:
– IP-enabled ATM service
n Wireless n Fully nonblocking switching architecture
Transport
n Highly efficient and deterministic performance
– 3G migration
n Instantaneous routing/switching around internal failures
– Wireless backhaul
n Scalable single-stage, low-latency design to achieve up to 320 Gbps
– RAN aggregation
in a single chassis
– Wireless core
– TDM circuit emulation for 2G transport
Universal Line Card (ULC)
n Triple Play Services All ULCs are hot-swappable. In contrast to legacy systems with cell-
– IP telephony or packet-specific processing cards, the ULC provides both native cell
– IPTV and packet switching at the same time. Therefore, the ULC significantly
reduces service provider card types, sparing inventory and operations
– Broadcast TV
complexity.
– VoIP
The ULC also contains the highly integrated Tellabs® custom ASIC,
supporting low-latency and line-rate performance at all packet sizes.
IP VPN
Layer 3 IP Router
One-platform
Ethernet VPN* solution to reduce
Layer 2
GigE SW IP/MPLS Core CapEx/OpEx
Frame Relay
FR SW
Layer 1 Layer 1
Private Lines SONET Metro/Long-Haul Transport
WDSC/BDSC
TDM
4ESS/5ESS
Innovative SLAs can be provisioned and managed on the ULC with: PLM Flexibility
All PLM types can be interchanged and interworked with each other
n Ingress per-flow policing in the Tellabs 8800 series. The Tellabs 8800 series delivers one of
n Ingress
the industry’s best SONET/SDH channelization. SONET/SDH PLMs
and egress per-flow queuing and shaping
are available in rates ranging from OC-3/STM-1 through OC-192/
n Per-flow congestion detection and avoidance STM-64. The OC-192/SDH-64 and the 10 GigE PLMs require one
n Support of all ATM QoS classes regardless of service types ULC and hence displace four standard PLMs. All channelized SONET/
n Support of IP QoS based on Differentiated Services (DiffServ) SDH interfaces are completely flexible in terms of channel (STS-1
classes of service through STS-48c) assignment or concatenated operations. With the
software-defined service edge feature, service providers can define
n Support of Ethernet CoS based on IEEE 802.1p any protocol (FR, ATM, EoS, PPP, MPLS and TDM) on a per-channel
n Wire-speed IP forwarding and processing with complex lookup basis via software configuration.
and filtering mechanisms
n Support of 32,000 flows per ULC and 512,000 flows per chassis
Combined with the switch fabric, the ULC provides the Tellabs 8800
series the ability to offer integrated and highly efficient data forwarding
across multiple services.
Redundancy Fully redundant platforms to Fully redundant platforms to Fully redundant platforms to
provide carrier-class reliability provide carrier-class reliability provide carrier-class reliability
N:1 Redundancy on all common N:1 Redundancy on all common 1:1 Redundancy on all common
system elements: power supplies, system elements: power supplies, system elements: power supplies,
cooling, BITS inputs, Stratum 3 cooling, BITS inputs, Stratum 3 cooling, BITS inputs, Stratum 3
internal clocks, etc. internal clocks, etc. internal clocks, etc.
data sheet
Tellabs® 8800 MultiService Router (MSR) Series — Enabling New Services and Network Convergence
Redundancy 1+1 Control Plane provides 1+1 Control Plane Redundancy: 1+1 Control Plane Redundancy:
non-stop reliability, mirror state provides non-stop reliability, mirror rovides non-stop reliability, mirror
from primary to secondary SCC state from primary to secondary SCC state from primary to secondary SCC
N:1 Forwarding Plane N:1 Forwarding Plane Redundancy: 1:1 Forwarding Plane Redundancy:
Redundancy: switch fabric will switch fabric will load share across 100% available internal bandwidth
load share across all three SCCs all three SCCs in case of unlikely switch fabric failure
1:12 switch fabric component 1:12 switch fabric component 1:8 switch fabric component
redundancy for graceful degradation redundancy for graceful degradation redundancy for graceful degradation
In-service insertion and removal of In-service insertion and removal of In-service insertion and removal of
system components and physical system components and physical system components and physical
interfaces interfaces interfaces
Weight (fully configured) 385 lbs (175 kg) 325 lb (147 kg) 160 lb (72 kg)
Cooling – 1 large fan tray with – 3 small fan trays with – Dual fan trays with 7
16 dual-speed fan 4 fans each fans each
– Top to bottom air flow – Top to bottom air flow – Side to side air flow
Electrical Power Three redundant power inputs — Four power input filters — each Powered AC or DC. 1:1 redundancy
each has A&B power inputs has A&B power inputs from separate, independent
power sources
Temperature 32° F – 113° F/0° C – 45° C 32° F – 113° F/0° C – 45° C 32° F – 113° F/0° C – 45° C
Maximum Altitude Up to 4,000 m (13,123 ft) Up to 4,000 m (13,123 ft) Up to 4,000 m (13,123 ft)
Software Specifications
n Layer 3 Protocol Supported – 2-Stage CAC at Layer 2, Layer 3 and LSP level
– Routing: BGP4, IS-IS, OSPF, PIM-SM – Strict Priority Queuing: CBR, VBR-rt, VBR-nrt, UBR, UBR+
– Advanced Routing features: BGP Confederation and BGP and UBR+max
graceful restart – Weighted Fair Queuing (WFQ) based on Deficit Round Robin
– IS-IS: Graceful Restart, Jumbo Frames, Domain-wide Prefix (DRR) scheme
Distribution, Mesh Groups, IGP Shortcuts – Policing at the ingress (Dual leaking bucket algorithm with 3
– OSPF: Stateful Redundancy, NSSA, IGP Shortcuts, color marking + explicit drop)
Multiple Instances, graceful restart – Shaping at the egress and ingress
– MPLS: LDP, RSVP-TE – Weighted Random Early Detection (WRED) and/or Weighted
– Advanced MPLS Features: MPLS traffic engineering, RSVP-TE, Tail Drop (WTD)
IS-IS-TE, OSPF-TE, Constraint-based Shortest Path First (CSPF) – Hierarchical queuing
– RSVP-TE: stateful redundancy, fast reroute (FRR) with sub 10ms – 32,000 Per-Flow Queues (unidirectional) per ULC or 512,000
failover, Diffserv encoding, backup LSPs, open-bandwidth LSPs per 8860 Chassis
and auto-bandwidth LSPs – 4,000 Per-Group Queues per ULC or 64,000 per 8860 Chassis
– LDP: LDP QoS, graceful restart, fault tolerant, LDP over – Virtual output queues
RSVP tunnels
– SLAs are applied (both policing and shaping) on Per-Flow
– IP VPN: RFC2547bis/4364 MP-BGP, OSPF multi-instance, Queues via state-of-the-art ASICs
overlapping VPNs, Full mesh and hub/spoke VPN topologies
– Multi-class pseudowires
– IP Multicast: IGMPv2, PIM-SMv2
– Weighted QoS
– Policies: Access lists, prefix lists, route maps, AS-path lists,
extended community lists n Carrier Class Resiliency
– DHCP relay
– Tellabs® ServiceAssuredTM Upgrade without affecting services
and minimal customer traffic loss
n Layer 1 and 2 Protocol Supported – Fully redundant platforms to provide carrier-class reliability
– ATM : UNI 3.0 and 3.1, PNNI 1.0 and 1.1, ILMI 4.0, IISP 1.0, – Hot-swappable switch fabric and line cards
AINI 1.2, ITU TI.617, IMA 1.0 and 1.1
– N:1 redundancy on all common systems elements: Switch fabric,
– Frame Relay: FRF 1.1 UNI, FRF 2.1 NNI, FRF.5 Network management processor, routing processor, power supplies, dual
Interworking, and FRF.8 Service Interworking, ITU Q.933 FR LMI DC feeds, cooling, external BITS inputs, Stratum 3 internal clocks,
– Ethernet/VLAN, link aggregation, E-line and E-LAN, VPLS, disks, OAM ports, etc.
H-VPLS, Q-in-Q STP, RSTP, MSTP – 1:N switch fabric component redundancy for graceful degradation
– EoS (X.86) and GFP – N:1 forwarding plane redundancy when using 3 SCCs
– TDM: SAToP – Nonstop forwarding for all traffic during control plane switchover
– HDLC – 1+1 control plane redundancy: Provides nonstop reliability,
– PPP (POS) mirrored states from primary to secondary SCC
– ML-PPP – Routing resiliency: OSPF and RSVP-TE stateful redundancy,
– Pseudowires based on Martini Draft for ATM, Frame Relay, OSPF, ISIS, BGP and LDP graceful restart
Ethernet/VLAN, PPP, HDLC and TDM traffic encapsulation – Database redundancy: RIB and FIB routing and forwarding table,
– MFA: The Use of Virtual Trunks for ATM/MPLS Control Plane OSPF-TE and ISIS-TE traffic engineering database, CAC, statistics,
Interworking VPLS MAC address, circuit states
– PPP states, ARP Cache, SVC states are maintained during
control plane switchover
n Traffic Management
– Data path protection: Supports redundant LSPs and LSP fast
– MPLS traffic engineering using OSPF-TE, ISIS-TE, RSVP-TE,
reroute in sub-10 ms, ECMP, link aggregation and SONET/SDH
LDP over RSVP tunnel
APS/MSP protection, ATM IMA, MLPPP, VRRP, STP, RSTP,
– CSPF routing MSTP, H-VPLS, backup pseudowires and VRRP, loop detection
– E-LSP (EXP inferred) blocking
– L-LSP (Label inferred) – Pseudowire redundancy: dual-homing for H-VPLS
– BFD support for OSPF, IS-IS, BGP, LDP and RSVP LSP
– Distributed PNNI signaling
data sheet
10
Tellabs® 8800 MultiService Router (MSR) Series — Enabling New Services and Network Convergence
n OAM
n Security
n MPLS n Pseudowires
– RFC 2597 Assured Forwarding PHB Group – MFA: The Use of Virtual Trucks for ATM/MPLS Control Plane Interworking
– RFC 2598 An Expedited Forwarding PHB – RFC 3916 Requirements for Pseudo-wire Emulation Edge-to-Edge (PWE3)
– RFC 2702 Requirements for Traffic Engineering Over MPLS – RFC 3985 PWE3 Architecture
– RFC 3031 MPLS Architecture – RFC 4379: Detecting MPLS Data Plane Failures
– RFC 3032 MPLS Label Stack Encoding – RFC 4446: IANA Allocations for Pseudo Wire Edge to Edge Emulation
– RFC 3036 LDP Specification – RFC 4447: Pseudowire Setup and Maintenance using LDP
– RFC 3037 LDP Applicability – RFC 4448: Encapsulation Methods for Transport of Ethernet Frames Over MPLS
– RFC 3063 MPLS Loop Prevention Mechanism – RFC 4553: Structure-Agnostic TDM over Packet (SAToP)
– RFC 3107 Carrying Label Information in BGP-4 – RFC 4618: Encapsulation Methods for Transport of PPP/HDLC over MPLS
– RFC 3215 LDP State Machines – RFC 4619: Encapsulation Methods for Transport of Frame Relay Over MPLS
– RFC 3270 MPLS Support for Differentiated Services – RFC 4717: Encapsulation Methods for Transport of ATM over MPLS Networks
– RFC 3346 Applicability Statement for Traffic Engineering with MPLS – Draft-IETF-PWE3-VCCV: Pseudo Wire Virtual Circuit Connectivity Verification (VCCV)
– RFC 3443 Time to Live (TTL) Processing in Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS) – Draft-IETF-PWE3-CW: PWE3 Control Word for Use Over an MPLS PSN
Networks – Draft-IETF-BFD-MPLS: Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD) for MPLS LSPs
– RFC 3468 The Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) Working Group Decision – Draft-IETF-pwe3-ms-pw-requirement: Requirements for Multi-segment Pseudowire
on MPLS Signaling Protocols Emulation Edge to Edge
– RFC 3469 Framework for Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS) based Recovery – Draft-IETF-pwe3-segmented-pw: Segmented Pseudowires
– RFC 3478 Graceful Restart Mechanism for Label Distribution Protocol
– RFC 3479 Fault Tolerance for LDP n PPP
– RFC 3564 Requirements for Support of Differentiated Services-aware MPLS – RFC 1332 PPP Internet Protocol Control Protocol (IPCP)
Traffic Engineering
– RFC 1334 PPP Authentication Protocols
– RFC 3612 Applicability Statement for Restart Mechanisms for the Label
– RFC 1661 PPP (Point-to-Point Protocol)
Distribution Protocol (LDP)
– RFC 1662 PPP in HDLC-like Framing
– RFC 4221 Overview of MPLS Management
– RFC 1990 PPP Multilink Protocol
– RFC 4364 (Revison of RFC 2547bis)
– RFC 1994 PPP Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol
– RFC 4379 Detecting MPLS Data Plane Failures
– RFC 2433 Microsoft PPP CHAP Extensions
– RFC 3518 Point-to-point Protocol (PPP) Bridging Control Protocol (BCP)
n VPLS and H-VPLS
– RFC 4762 Virtual Private LAN Services over MPLS
n GRE
– Draft-IETF-L2VPN-ARP-Mediation: ARP Mediation for IP Interworking
– RFC 1701 Generic Route Encapsulation (GRE)
of Layer 2 VPN
– RFC 1702 Generic Route Encapsulation over IPv4 networks
– RFC 2473 Generic Packet Tunneling in IPv6
n Ethernet
– RFC 2784 Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE) (revision of RFC 1701)
– IEEE 802.1d Bridging
– IEEE 802.1p Priority
n Frame Relay
– IEEE 802.1q VLAN
– FRF.1.1 Frame Relay UNI
– IEEE 802.1ad Q-in-Q/VLAN stacking
– FRF.2.1 Frame Relay NNI
– IEEE 802.1ag (Draft) service OAM
– FRF.5 Frame Relay / ATM PVC Network Interworking
– IEEE 802.3 10Base-T
– FRF.8.1 Frame Relay / ATM PVC Service Interworking
– IEEE 802.3u 100Base-TX
– ITU-T Q.933 Annex A DSS1 — Signaling Specification for Frame Mode Switched
– IEEE 802.3x Flow Control
and Permanent Virtual Connection Control and Status Monitoring
– IEEE 802.3z 1000Base-SX/LX
– RFC 2427 Multiprotocol Interconnect over Frame Relay (revision of RFC 1490)
– IEEE 802.3ad Link Aggregation
– RFC 2590 Transmission of IPv6 Packets over Frame Relay Networks Specification
– IEEE 802.3ae 10 Gbps Ethernet
– ANSI T1.617 Annex D DSS1 — Signaling Specification for Frame Relay Bearer
– IEEE 802.3x Ethernet Flow Control
Service
– IEEE 802.3 with 802.2 SAP
– IEEE 802.3 with 802.2 SNAP
n OAM
– RFC 2427 Multiprotocol Interconnect over Frame Relay (revision of RFC 1490)
– ITU-T I.610 B-ISDN Operation and Maintenance Principles and Functions
– RFC 2684 Multiprotocol Encapsulation over ATM Adaptation Layer 5 (revision
of RFC 1483) – ITU-T Q.933 Annex A DSS1 — Signaling Specification for Frame Mode Switched
and Permanent Virtual Connection Control and Status Monitoring
– RFC 4379 Detecting MPLS Data Plane Failures
n BFD
– Draft-IETF-PWE3-VCCV: Pseudo Wire Virtual Circuit Connectivity Verification (VCCV)
– Draft-IETF-BFD-base: Bidirectional Forwarding Detection
– Draft-IETF-BFD-MPLS: Bidirectional Forwarding Detection for MPLS LSPs
– Draft-IETF-generic: Generic Application of BFD
– Draft IEEE 802.1ag Service OAM
– Draft-IETF-BFD-v4v6: BFD for IPv4 and IPv6
– Draft-IETF-BFD-MPLS: Bidirectional Forwarding Detection for MPLS LSPs
data sheet
13
Tellabs® 8800 MultiService Router (MSR) Series — Enabling New Services and Network Convergence
n ATM n MIB
– ATM Forum UNI 3.0, 3.1 and 4.0 – RFC 1212 Concise MIB Definitions
– ATM Forum PNNI 1.0 and 1.1 – RFC 1213 Management Information Base for Network Management of
– ATM Forum Integrated Local Management Interface (ILMI) 4.0 TCP/IP-based Internets: MIB-II
– ATM Forum Interim Inter-switch Signaling Protocol (IISP) 1.0 – RFC 1398 Definitions of Managed Objects for Ethernet-like Interface Types
– ATM Forum IMA 1.0 and 1.1 – RFC 1657 Definitions of Managed Objects for Version 4 of the Border Gateway
– ATM Forum ATM Inter-Network Interface (AINI) 1.2 Protocol (BGP-4) Using SMIv2
– ITU-T 1.610 Annex D B-ISDN Operation and Maintenance Principles and Functions – RFC 1850 OSPF Version2 Management Information Base
– ITU-T Q.2110 B-ISDN ATM Adaptation Layer — Service Specific Connection – RFC 1857 A Model for Common Operational Statistics
Oriented Protocol (SSCOP) – RFC 1902 Structure of Management Information for Version 2 of the Simple
– MFA: The Use of Virtual Trunks for ATM/MPLS Control Plane Interworking Network Management
– ITU-T Q.2130 B-ISDN Signaling ATM Adaptation Layer — Service Specific – RFC 1903 Textual Conventions for SNMP Version 2
Coordination Function for Support of Signaling at the User to Network Interface – RFC 2011 SNMPv2 Management Information Base for IP using SMIv2
(SSCF at the UNI) – RFC 2013 SNMPv2 Management Information Base for the User Datagram
– ITU-T Q.2931 B-ISDN DSS2 User-Network Interface (UNI) Layer 3 Specification Protocol using SMIv2
for Basic Call/Connection Control – RFC 2074 Remote Network Monitoring Protocol Identifiers MIB
– ITU-T Q.2961 B-ISDN DSS2 Additional Traffic Parameters – RFC 2465 MIB for IP Version 6: Textual Conventions and General Groups
– Telecordia GR-1248 Generic Requirements for Operations of ATM Network – RFC 2493 Textual Conventions for MIB Modules using performance history
Elements (NES) based on 15 minute intervals
– RFC 1695 Definition of Management Objects for ATM Management Version 8.0 – RFC 2495 Definitions of Managed Objects for the DS-1 and E-1 Interface Types
Using SMIv2 – RFC 2496 Definitions of Managed Objects for the DS-3/E-3 Interface Types
– RFC 2225 Classical IP and ARP over ATM (Obsoletes RFC 1577) – RFC 2514 Definitions of Textual Conventions and Object-identities for ATM Mgmt
– RFC 2684 Multiprotocol Encapsulation over ATM Adaptation Layer 5 – RFC 2515 Definitions of Managed Objects for ATM Management
(Obsoletes RFC 1483) – RFC 2571 An Architecture for Describing SNMP Management Framework
– RFC 3496 Protocol Extension for Support of Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) – RFC 2863 The Interfaces Group MIB using SMIv2
Service Class-aware – RFC 3606 Definitions of Managed Objects for ATM Interfaces
– Draft -ietf-diffserv-model DiffServ MIB
n SNMP – ATM Forum 0065 ILMI Related MIBs
– RFC 1157 Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) – ATM Forum 0055 PNNI related MIBs
– RFC 1215 Convention for Defining Traps for Use with SNMP – ATM Forum 0066 ATM Soft PVC MIBs
– RFC 1904 Conformance Statements for Version 2 of the Simple Network – ATM Forum 0086 ATM Inverse Multiplexing
Management Protocol (SNMPv2) – An extensive arrary of proprietary MIBs is also supported
– RFC 1905 Protocol Operations for Version 2 of the Simple Network Management
Protocol (SNMPv2) n Security
– RFC 1906 Transport Mappings for Version 2 of the Simple Network Management
– RFC 1321 The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm
Protocol (SNMPv2)
– RFC 1492 Access Control Protocol or TACACS
– RFC 2012 SNMPv2 Management Information Basefor the Transmission Control
Protocol using SMIv2 – RFC 1858 Security Considerations for IP Fragmnet Filtering
– RFC 2570 SNMP Version 3 Framework – RFC 1948 Defending Against Sequence Number Attacks
– RFC 2578 Structure of Management Information Version (SIMv2) – RFC 2385 Protection of BGP Sessions via the TCP MD5 Signature Option
– RFC 2579 Textual conventions for SMIv2 – RFC 2759 Microsoft PPP CHAP Extensions, Version 2
– RFC 3411 An Architecture for Describing Simple Network Management – RFC 2827 Network Ingress Filtering: Defeating Denial of Service Attacks
protocol (SNMP) Management Frameworks which employ IP Source Address
– RFC 3412 Message Processing and Dispatching for the Simple Network – RFC 2865 Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service (RADIUS)
Management Protocol (SNMP) – RFC 3097 RSVP Cryptographic Authentication — Updated Message Type Value
– RFC 3413 User-based Security Model (USM) for Version 3 of the Simple Network – RFC 3101 The OSPF Not So Stubby Area (NSSA) Option
Management Protocol (SNMP) Applications – RFC 3195 Reliable Delivery for Syslog
– RFC 3414 User-based Security Model (USM) for Version 3 of the Simple Network – RFC 3414 User-based Security Model (USM) for Version 3 of the Simple Network
Management Protocol (SNMPv3) Management Protocol (SNMPv3)
– RFC 3415 View-based Security Model (USM) for Version 3 of the Simple Network – RFC 3567 IS-IS Cryptographic Authentication
Management Protocol (SNMP) – Draft-ylonen-ssh-protocol The SSH (Secure Shell) Remote Login Protocol
– RFC 3418 Management Information Base (MIB) for the Simple Network – Cisco Proprietary TACACS+
Management Protocol (SNMP) – ATM Forum af-sec-0100.002 ATM Security 1.1
– RFC 3584 Coexistence between Version 1, Version 2, and Version 3 of the – ATM Forum af-sec-0172.000 Control Plane Security
Internet-standard Network Management Framework – ATM Forum af-pnni-0055.002 Private Network-to-Network Interface (PNNI) Spec 1.1
North America Asia Pacific Europe, Middle East & Africa Latin America & Caribbean Statements herein may contain projections or other forward-looking statements
regarding future events, products, features, technology and resulting commercial
or technological benefits and advantages. These statements are for discussion
Tellabs Tellabs Tellabs Tellabs purposes only, are subject to change and are not to be construed as instructions,
One Tellabs Center 3 Anson Road Abbey Place 1401 N.W. 136th Avenue product specifications, guarantees or warranties. Actual results may differ materially.
1415 West Diehl Road #14–01 Springleaf Tower 24–28 Easton Street Suite 202 The following trademarks and service marks are owned by Tellabs Operations,
Naperville, IL 60563 Singapore 079909 High Wycombe, Bucks Sunrise, FL 33323 Inc., or its affiliates in the United States and/or other countries: TELLABS®,
U.S.A. Republic of Singapore HP11 1NT U.S.A. TELLABS and T symbol®, and T symbol®.
+1 630 798 8800 +65 6215 6411 United Kingdom +1 954 839 2800 Any other company or product names may be trademarks of their respective companies.
Fax: +1 630 798 2000 Fax: +65 6215 6422 +44 870 238 4700 Fax: +1 954 839 2828 © 2007 Tellabs. All rights reserved.
Fax: +44 870 238 4851 74.1879E Rev. B 12/07